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Landscape-Genetic Analysis of Population Structure in the Texas Gray Fox Oral Rabies Vaccination Zone
Authors:RANDY W DEYOUNG  ANGELINE ZAMORANO  BRIAN T MESENBRINK  TYLER A CAMPBELL  BRUCE R LELAND  GUY M MOORE  RODNEY L HONEYCUTT  J JEFFREY ROOT
Institution:1. Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, Kingsville, TX 78363, USA;2. United States Department of Agriculture, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Kerrville, TX 78028, USA;3. United States Department of Agriculture, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Kingsville Field Station, Kingsville, TX 78363, USA;4. United States Department of Agriculture, Wildlife Services, San Antonio, TX 78201, USA;5. Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, TX 78756, USA;6. Pepperdine University, Natural Science Division, 24255 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, CA 90263, USA;7. United States Department of Agriculture, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT In west-central Texas, USA, abatement efforts for the gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) rabies epizootic illustrate the difficulties inherent in large-scale management of wildlife disease. The rabies epizootic has been managed through a cooperative oral rabies vaccination program (ORV) since 1996. Millions of edible baits containing a rabies vaccine have been distributed annually in a 16-km to 24-km zone around the perimeter of the epizootic, which encompasses a geographic area >4 × 105 km2. The ORV program successfully halted expansion of the epizootic into metropolitan areas but has not achieved the ultimate goal of eradication. Rabies activity in gray fox continues to occur periodically outside the ORV zone, preventing ORV zone contraction and dissipation of the epizootic. We employed a landscape-genetic approach to assess gray fox population structure and dispersal in the affected area, with the aim of assisting rabies management efforts. No unique genetic clusters or population boundaries were detected. Instead, foxes were weakly structured over the entire region in an isolation by distance pattern. Local subpopulations appeared to be genetically non-independent over distances >30 km, implying that long-distance movements or dispersal may have been common in the region. We concluded that gray foxes in west-central Texas have a high potential for long-distance rabies virus trafficking. Thus, a 16-km to 24-km ORV zone may be too narrow to contain the fox rabies epizootic. Continued expansion of the ORV zone, although costly, may be critical to the long-term goal of eliminating the Texas fox rabies virus variant from the United States.
Keywords:gray fox  landscape genetics  oral rabies vaccination  population structure  spatial autocorrelation  Urocyon cinereoargenteus
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